Thứ Ba, 5 tháng 6, 2018

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Hi I'm Yolanda Wight I am 34 years old, I am married, I have 3 children.

So my mom was from Mexico City, my father Italian.

We lived in Huntington Beach, and it was kind of hard to feel fitting in, in the 90's there

was a lot of racism, lot of white supremacy in Huntington Beach, I was chased by a lot

of white supremacists in middle school

the weird thing is I don't like, it's Fountain Valley like where I live right now in Westminster

I feel like this is not anti-immigrant, it's actually embraced immigrants the most.

My son's school, the back side's in Vietnamese, everything's in English on one side

and the back side's in Vietnamese.

When we had a lot of Mexican immigrants when I was young, the backside wasn't in Spanish.

So then when the election came, I had my neighbors who were like about to hang trump signs in

their yard and I'm super uncomfortable.

I saw the line starting, I saw the separation starting,

I saw the anger starting, I saw my kids starting to be scared, I saw them starting to feel

like... wait, people don't like us because of our skin color? I don't understand

So my kids actually feel it. They're the ones who brought it up.

They actually asked me why does Trump not love us?

Why does he want to get rid of all the Mexicans what did we do?

Why are we so bad?

Why would you build a wall?

There is just hate, all I see is hate, all everybody talks about is hate.

It's just so much anger.

We don't need walls we need bridges with flowers on them and lights, you know?

Beautiful lit up bridges.

That's what I want.

There's power in numbers.

We are, we have the most numbers, I feel that we can and we want to make change.

I feel like everybody in California truly has the heart

and the love to make the change.

And they want it.

For more infomation >> California Counts - Yolanda - Duration: 2:38.

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California's primary could be train wreck for Democrats - Duration: 4:41.

For more infomation >> California's primary could be train wreck for Democrats - Duration: 4:41.

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Will California determine if Democrats take back the House? - Duration: 6:12.

For more infomation >> Will California determine if Democrats take back the House? - Duration: 6:12.

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Democrats seek to avoid disaster in California primary - Duration: 4:37.

For more infomation >> Democrats seek to avoid disaster in California primary - Duration: 4:37.

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Midterm battle over California gas tax - Duration: 2:06.

For more infomation >> Midterm battle over California gas tax - Duration: 2:06.

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California enseña español a través de la comida latina | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:19.

For more infomation >> California enseña español a través de la comida latina | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:19.

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Stunning Tiny House Built by San Diego, California's Zen Cottages - Duration: 1:50.

Stunning Tiny House Built by San Diego, California's Zen Cottages

For more infomation >> Stunning Tiny House Built by San Diego, California's Zen Cottages - Duration: 1:50.

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Trump could hurt California GOP in midterms - Duration: 1:30.

Voters in California weren't the biggest fans of then-candidate Donald Trump during the

2016 presidential election.

In fact, he received 31.6 percent of the state's popular vote — less than any other Republican

candidate since the 19th century.

His popularity there hasn't changed much.

As of April 2018, he had a net approval rating of -27.

Considering how Californians feel about the president, some GOP candidates, like John

Cox, have tried to separate themselves from him ahead of the June 5 primary — even after

receiving his endorsement.

But the party might have more to worry about.

Out of the 19 million voters in California, independents now outnumber Republicans by

73,000, according to a recent analysis — making them the second-largest voting group next

to Democrats.

But the number of voters who identify as Democrats has fallen slightly, too.

Before the 2016 election, 44.92 percent of California voters were registered Democrats;

now that number has dropped to around 44.4 percent.

So while the Democratic Party is in the lead among affiliated California voters, it has

the same problem the Republican Party has.

The main difference is that California's Democrats hold a lot more seats in Congress than its

Republicans do, and the state has more potential toss-up races than any other in the upcoming

midterm elections.

For more infomation >> Trump could hurt California GOP in midterms - Duration: 1:30.

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El doble drama de seis niños desamparados de California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:18.

For more infomation >> El doble drama de seis niños desamparados de California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:18.

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California primary process complicates races - Duration: 2:41.

For more infomation >> California primary process complicates races - Duration: 2:41.

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California Inches Closer To Socialism, Offers Guaranteed Income to Residents - Duration: 3:48.

California Inches Closer To Socialism, Offers Guaranteed Income to Residents

A hallmark of socialism is the belief among proponents that life would be more fair for

all if the collective wealth among a group of individuals were redistributed more equitably

among those same people.

In other words, taking money away from the rich and giving it to the poor for no real

reason other than the simple fact that they are living, breathing human beings — a terrible

concept easily understood by children but the failed reality of which is absolutely

ignored by liberals and progressives.

That delusional belief just took a step closer to becoming a dismal reality in the increasingly

socialistic People's Republic of California, where the young mayor of Stockton is about

to implement a trial-run of a guaranteed income program to fight poverty, according to The

Hill.

The 27-year-old Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs announced he will begin an 18-month experiment

beginning next year that will guarantee a "no strings" attached basic income of

$500 per month for a select group of low-income residents.

The program will initially be funded by private donations from a philanthropic organization

known as The Economic Security Project, which will monitor how the monthly stipends are

utilized by the recipients.

That organization, which has fronted $1 million in funds for the socialist experiment, is

co-chaired by Chris Hughes, one of the incredibly wealthy co-founders of Facebook.

"I jumped at the opportunity," Tubbs told Reuters in an interview about the chance to

implement the privately-funded — for now — guaranteed basic income experiment in

his city.

"And then, maybe, in two or three years, we can have a much more informed discussion

about the social safety net, the income floor people deserve and the best way to do it because

we'll have more data and research," he added.

It remains unclear at this point exactly who among Stockton's 300,000 residents would

qualify to participate in the guaranteed basic income project, but Tubbs said he "felt

almost a moral responsibility" to take action "a little bit out the box."

"I know, for me, I want to live in a community where people's basic needs are met," Tubbs

said.

The project was supposedly modeled after a program in Alaska which distributes annual

dividend checks from oil revenues to all residents, and inspired by a two-year trial program in

Finland which provided roughly 2,000 unemployed residents with $600 monthly stipends.

Of course, proponents fail to acknowledge that Finland is actually discontinuing that

program once it is complete in December, as it was deemed too expensive without providing

any credible or tangible results to support its continuation.

As for the 34-year-old Hughes — who is, to his credit, funding this venture in Stockton

with private money — his goal is to have a similar program implemented nationwide that

would be funded by taxpayers, not philanthropic groups like his own.

His proposal is for the federal government to issue a guaranteed basic income of $500

per month to any and all individuals who earn less than $50,000 annually, a proposal that

could cost at least $290 billion per year.

Hughes suggested the imposition of a 50 percent tax on all income and capital gains realized

by American taxpayers earning $250,000 per year or more.

In other words, again, redistributing the acquired wealth of the rich to be given to

the poor for no reason other than their mere existence.

Redistribution of wealth didn't work in Finland's experiment, nor is it working

in communist nations like China, Cuba or Venezuela — and it didn't work out in the former

Soviet socialist republics.

"But this time it will be different," the California proto-socialists declare, as

their failing state slips ever closer toward full-on socialist communism.

For more infomation >> California Inches Closer To Socialism, Offers Guaranteed Income to Residents - Duration: 3:48.

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More than dozen protesters arrested in California Capitol - Duration: 2:04.

For more infomation >> More than dozen protesters arrested in California Capitol - Duration: 2:04.

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California Primary: Campaigning Down To The Wire - Duration: 2:04.

For more infomation >> California Primary: Campaigning Down To The Wire - Duration: 2:04.

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California State Archives Speaker Series - Charles Kobayashi - Duration: 1:47.

The Chinese Exclusion Act when into effect in 1882.

The Japanese were faced with the same type of animus that the Chinese had encountered earlier.

California was a gold mine for anti-Asian legislation.

In 1912, I think it was, all Japanese were banned from coming in to this country.

In 1924 , the US Supreme Court emphatically stated that Japanese were not white

and were not caucasians and therefore were not eligible for citizenship.

There were letters from the people of California written to Earl Warren once he became Governor,

which expressed their adamant desire to see Japanese residents removed

not just from California but from the United States.

Regardless of citizenship status.

The main thing is that we don't want this to happen again.

We don't want any kind of restrictive legislation aimed at one particular race,

and have them placed into concentration camps or

internment camps where they were uprooted from their world.

It's been a long, long, long road because from being deemed to be not assimilable

by the people before the war to the point now that where

Japanese Americans are pretty well intertwined with all the cultures and peoples

of this county and this state.

Thank you.

For more infomation >> California State Archives Speaker Series - Charles Kobayashi - Duration: 1:47.

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BREAKING News Out Of CALIFORNIA… 286 YEARS IN PRISON!!! - Duration: 1:29.

A jury found a Gardena man guilty today of sexually assaulting and suffocating a woman

and raping three others, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office announced.

Kevon Takashi Ross, 33, was convicted of 25 felony counts in case YA093449: one count

each of first-degree murder and sodomy of an unconscious victim, eight counts of rape

of an unconscious person, seven counts of forcible rape, six counts of sexual penetration

by foreign object and two counts of injuring a girlfriend.

Deputy District Attorney Frank Dunnick said the jury also found true the allegation that

the defendant caused great bodily injury.

Sentencing is scheduled on July 13 in Department O of the Los Angeles County Superior Court,

Inglewood Branch.

Ross faces 286 years to life in state prison.

The defendant sexually assaulted and asphyxiated a woman at a Gardena hotel on Dec. 12, 2015,

according to court testimony.

Additionally, the defendant sexually assaulted a girlfriend in October 2007, the prosecutor

said.

Two other women who dated Ross also were raped between June and November 2015, one of them

in Riverside County, according to trial testimony.

The case was investigated by the Gardena Police Department.

For more infomation >> BREAKING News Out Of CALIFORNIA… 286 YEARS IN PRISON!!! - Duration: 1:29.

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Feeding Ostriches (Fun Things to do in Solvang, California) Solvang with Kids - Duration: 5:07.

Hotel accommodations was provided by King Frederick Inn.

Hello Bloggineers, this is day two in Solvang and we're at Ostrichland.

[Brother] Ahhh!!!!

This is a ranch where big birds roam and people can buy cups of food to feed them, with a gift shop that sells fresh eggs.

First, we're reading some fun facts about the ostrich.

And then it's time to feed them.

Warning, they do like to bite.

The backdrop of the landscape on which they ram resembles their native desert.

In case you are wondering what we're feeding them, the ostrich food is mainly made of hay.

Come and get it.

And now it's Brothers turn.

Slow mo.

Let's watch that again.

[Brother] Haha, two ostriches!

Then this bird is doing some crazy dance.

[Marvin Gaye's Let's Get It On]

Looks like she's gonna crack her head.

Now he's chasing other birds around.

We're moving to another part of the farm.

All right. Let go, let go, let go!

That's like half of it.

Ostriches aren't the only birds here.

Now we're feeding some emu.

We had so much fun at Ostrichland.

Our next stop is the Old Mission Santa Ynez.

Founded in 1804, this was the 19th of the 21 missions built in California by the Franciscan fathers.

Today we'll be going on a self-guided tour.

Brother is looking at the map to see where to go next.

We're now entering the cathedral.

The mission church interior was restored in 2007.

Next we're visiting the courtyard.

Counting this we've been to seven California missions and we have 14 more to go.

Now it's time to get some brunch

and some snacks.

Our next stop is the Wildling Museum.

This museum inspires visitors to enjoy, value, and conserve wildlife and natural area through art.

Brother is going to make some crafts.

Let's go check out the second floor.

I'm doing a scavenger hunt on this mural.

We're going up to level three.

There were many art made by children on display here.

Brother found another room with hands-on activities. He's going to be making an origami.

We had so much fun here.

Now we're at Quicksilver Ranch.

This is a breeding facility for miniature horses.

Brother smile for a picture.

No we're having dinner at Chomp.

This is a family friendly restaurant that serves all American cuisines such as hamburgers, fries, and shakes.

I'm having the chicken pesto sandwich that I'm waiting to cool down.

And Brother's having some sliders.

And my parents are having a hamburger and fish tacos.

Okay, I'm going to try to eat this hot chicken pesto thing right now while it's so hot.

The chicken pesto is really, it's really tasty.

The chicken is super juicy and tender. The pesto is pesto. It's delicious

And the bread is nice and crispy.

And Brother gives it his signature thumbs up.

I'm having an ice cream sundae, and Chocolate is having...

I"m having an ice cream sundae and Brother is having a Chocolate ice cream for dessert.

This is a recreational area with a unique theme wooden playground.

We have so much fun in Little Denmark.

Plan your trip at solvangusa.com.

Please hit the subscribe button and remember to look for your own adventure.

For more infomation >> Feeding Ostriches (Fun Things to do in Solvang, California) Solvang with Kids - Duration: 5:07.

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Pilot made an emergency landing using California STREET as a runway - Duration: 7:59.

A small plane swooped over the tops of cars before making the 'perfect' emergency landing on a California street on Friday fternoon

Incredibly nobody was hurt as he pilot used all of her skill to get the light aircraft on he ground safely in Orange Cou ty

 The plane landed on a road in Huntington Beach with the pilo narrowly managing to avoid st eet signs, lamp posts, telepho e poles and even other cars wh ch pulled over to the side

She did a 'fantastic job,' a Huntington Beach police spokes oman said.John Wayne Airport‏ weeted that the Cessna Skyhawk that heading to the airport lo t power, but was able to safel land on a on a road

There was no impact to airpor operations.Dashcam footage ca tured the amazing moments when the plane raced down the road ith the undercarriage of the a rcraft just barely clearing th tops cars

Others pulled over to the sid of the street to avoid a coll sion.  Officers on scene said he pilot was extremely calm an unfazed by what had happened

 They also said 'clearly this ould have been much worse,' wi h neighbors calling her one of the luckiest people alive

RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next Ever wondered why our bags look so damaged? Bagg ge handler

Mid-air stink! Frontier Airl nes flight from San Diego to. Share this article Share W tnesses took photos of the pla e settled in the middle of the road as they drove by or stopp d to watch authorities look ov r the scene

'This could have been really, eally bad,' witness Tory 'TJ' ohnson said to ABC. 'She flew nderneath all those wires, whi h is a pretty big deal

Those wires hang down pretty ow and could have killed the p wer throughout this entire blo k

It was pretty gnarly.'The pla e was eventually moved and wil be now be taken apart for ass ssment as officials try to fig re out what happened

As the FAA investigates they h ve not released the pilot's na e but both they and the NTSB a e expected to respond to quest ons about the incident in due ourse

For more infomation >> Pilot made an emergency landing using California STREET as a runway - Duration: 7:59.

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California, Long A Blue State, Could Get Bluer In Primary - Duration: 6:57.

California, Long A Blue State, Could Get Bluer In Primary

Is California, home to one in eight Americans, becoming the nation's best example of one-party

rule?

Tuesday's primary election will set the stage for November races for governor, Congress

and the Legislature, but it will also test whether the state's vanishing Republicans

have enough remaining influence to avoid another shutout at the statewide polls.

After all, Democrats in California hold every statewide office and dominate both chambers

of the Legislature, while counting a 3.6-million edge in voter registrations and a 39-14 advantage

in U.S. House seats.

The outcome Tuesday will impact how the state handles a litany of problems, from homelessness

to a public pension crisis.

For California, the election could become "our biggest moment of transition" to

a state functionally run by elected officials from one party, said Thad Kousser, who heads

the political science department at the University of California, San Diego.

Across the country "red states have gotten redder and blue state have gotten bluer and

the fights have been within, rather than between, the parties," Kousser said.

CAN A REPUBLICAN EVEN MAKE THE NOVEMBER BALLOT?

The key marker will be the race for governor , in which Republican John Cox has the backing

of President Donald Trump in his bid to qualify for a two-person runoff this fall.

Under California's unusual primary system — sometimes called the jungle primary — only

the top two vote-getters, regardless of party, advance to the general election.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to easily top the field, but former Los Angeles

Antonio Villaraigosa and state Treasurer John Chiang are among the Democrats hoping to box

out Cox and make it a one-party showdown in November for the state's highest office.

That's already the case in the race for U.S. Senate, where the GOP failed to field

a credible candidate and Sen. Dianne Feinstein is expected to face another Democrat in November,

state Sen. Kevin de Leon.

The same thing happened in 2016, when only two Democrats were on the Senate ballot in

the fall, Sen. Kamala Harris and then-Rep. Loretta Sanchez.

In a worst-case scenario for the GOP, voters would see only Democrats in November in races

for governor and U.S. Senate.

A TRANSFORMED CALIFORNIA

California is, by itself, the world's fifth largest economy.

But the humming economic engine masks widespread problems with homelessness, soaring housing

costs and a growing gap between rich and poor that will be inherited by the next governor.

The plight of the GOP in the state has been long documented, as a surge in immigrants

transformed California and its voting patterns.

Once a reliably Republican state in presidential elections, California became more Democratic

as it became more diverse.

Most of the state's new voters are Latino and Asian and tend to lean Democratic.

Only about one in four voters in the state is a Republican.

You'd have to go back to 1988 to find a Republican who carried the state in a presidential

election, George H.W. Bush.

And the last Republican win in a statewide race was in 2006.

The party suffered another indignity this election season: independents — those voters

registered to no political party at all — surpassed Republicans in registration numbers Friday,

reducing the GOP to third-party status.

What that all means for Cox: even if he manages to get into the runoff, he would be a longshot

against a Democrat in November.

Even so, Republicans are hoping his presence on the fall ballot, if he makes it, would

energize Republicans, driving turnout and helping GOP candidates down the ballot.

Without him or a candidate for U.S. Senate, it could be a disaster.

MAKING A STAND

Democrats are hoping to oust a string of Republican U.S. House members from districts that were

carried by Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential race.

Four of them are completely or partly in Orange County , once known as a Republican fortress.

For decades, white, suburban homeowners delivered winning margins for GOP candidates.

But the county's population has grown more diverse, creating inroads for Democrats.

Republicans could deliver some surprises.

In some of the districts, it's possible that a large number of Democratic candidates

could dilute the party's vote, in effect elevating two Republicans to the runoff.

ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM

A looming presence will be Trump, who lost California by over 4 million votes in 2016.

While the president is unpopular California — a state regarded as a fulcrum in the so-called

Trump resistance — Cox is hoping his endorsement will help unite conservatives behind him and

help fend off a scrappy challenge from fellow Republican Travis Allen on Tuesday.

When it comes to Trump, voters will have an easy choice between the parties' candidates.

Cox and Allen are enthusiastic supporters of the president, while Democrats uniformly

loathe his policies.

END OF AN ERA

It's an unusual election for Gov. Jerry Brown.

He isn't running — for anything.

The 80-year-old Democrat is wrapping up his final term as governor.

It's actually his second act — he first held the job from 1975 to 1983.

Along the way he's also been attorney general, secretary of state and mayor of Oakland.

His family is as close as California has to a political dynasty.

Political scientist Jack Pitney, who teaches at Claremont McKenna College, notes that between

1946 and 2014 there were 18 midterm elections and a member of the Brown family was on the

California statewide ballot in 15 of them, either Jerry Brown, his father, former Gov.

Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, or his sister, Kathleen Brown.

"It really is the end of an era," Pitney said in an email.

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